Michel Platini declined to discuss his bid for the FIFA presidency on Friday, preferring instead to deliver a glowing assessment of his own performance in charge of European soccer’s governing body UEFA.
In a self-congratulatory news conference, Platini and UEFA secretary general Gianni Infantino proclaimed the European body as pioneers in the fight against racism, leaders in tackling match-fixing and said they had brought financial sanity to soccer in the region.
Platini also praised his controversial decision to increase the number of teams at the European championship to 24 and declared UEFA’s five-referee system, developed as an alternative to goal-line technology, a great success.
Photo: Reuters
The Frenchman is seen as the frontrunner in the race to replace outgoing FIFA president Sepp Blatter, who is to relinquish his mandate at the helm of world soccer’s governing body at a Feb. 26 election in Zurich, Switzerland.
Platini, who has been UEFA president since 2007, has not yet talked about his plans for the FIFA presidency and again frustrated reporters who expected to discuss them for the first time on Friday.
Instead, Platini and Infantino went through a rerun of what they considered some of UEFA’s most impressive achievements.
Infantino talked of how UEFA’s break-even policy, known as Financial Fair Play, had cut the losses made by Europe’s first-division clubs from 1.7 billion euros (US$1.9 billion) in 2011 to 487 million euros in the most recent financial year.
“We have been able to reduce wage inflation, lead European club football into operational profits and restore sanity to football,” he said.
Infantino added that the total of unpaid bills had dropped from 57 million euros in 2011 to 5.5 million euros, which he described as “quite impressive.”
He said UEFA had also led the way in the fight against racism and discrimination.
“UEFA was the first football body to give officials guidelines ... even giving the referee power to abandon the match,” Infantino said.
UEFA is also the “football organization which is a leader in the fight against match-fixing,” he said.
Platini enthused over the qualifying competition for Euro 2016.
“We have seen very high quality games, teams who have not qualified for a long time on the verge of qualifying, such as Romania, Austria, Scotland and Wales — proof we made the right decision” in expanding the tournament, he said. “We’ve had exiting matches, excellent crowds and everyone is delighted with that and we will have a wonderful tournament in France.”
Platini, who has publicly opposed the use of goal-line technology, then talked up one of his flagship moves at UEFA — the introduction of additional assistants on each goal-line to help the referee.
The system has failed to prevent mistakes in the Champions League and Serie A, where it is used, and many observers have wondered whether the extra officials make a significant contribution, but Platini had an answer for that.
“It’s been very successful, there have been wrong decisions because of mistakes by individuals. Of course, it’s not perfect, but it’s not the system’s fault,” he said.
A suggestion that there was a worrying disparity between Europe’s richest clubs, particularly those in the English Premier League, and the rest of the continent was given short shrift.
“You always have someone who has more than the others,” Platini said. “VfL Wolfsburg complain they cannot compete [financially] with English clubs, but maybe clubs in Croatia say they do not have as much money as Wolfsburg, and clubs in Iceland may say they don’t have as much money as in Croatia. And clubs in the Faroe Islands are envious of clubs in Iceland.”
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